Misplaced Pages

Kings County Elevated Railway

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Kings County Elevated Railway Company) Railroad company in Brooklyn, New York

This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Kings County Elevated Railway" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (October 2016) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

The Kings County Elevated Railway Company (KCERy) was a builder and operator of elevated railway lines in Kings County, New York. Kings County is now coextensive with the borough of Brooklyn in New York City, but at the time the railway started, it consisted of several towns and the smaller independent city of Brooklyn. Its original services were operated with steam locomotives.

Corporate history

The KCERy was founded January 6, 1879, but did not open its first line for revenue service until 1888. The company was organized by Judge Hiram Bond and financed by a group of investors from Boston that included Moses Kimball and Willard T. Sears of the architectural firm Cummings and Sears, which had experience in designing stone railroad bridges and ramps. The company did surveys and design work and promoted the project. Due to the principals behind the project being from out of town, the project had difficulty getting fully licensed. The package of rights and designs were sold to New York City investors led by Gen. James Jourdan due to the lack of support for the Bostonians by local political leaders. Due to the persistence of Jourdan the project eventually got off the ground. The company directors besides Jourdan were Edward A. Abbott, Henry J. Davison, Harvey Farrington, Wendell Goodwin, Henry J. Robinson, James O. Sheldon and William A. Read. William A. Read was the financier whose company Read & Company later became Dillon, Read. On October 1, 1899, the Kings County Elevated Railroad (KCERR) became successor to the KCERy, and on May 24, 1900, the KCERR was merged into its competitor, the Brooklyn Union Elevated Railroad company, thus ending its separate corporate existence.

Fulton Street Line

The KCERy ran only one rapid transit mainline, the Fulton Street Elevated, beginning in 1888, but it was one of the most lucrative in Brooklyn, operating from Fulton Ferry, through the heart of the downtown area, then through the center of the borough, and the communities of Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brownsville and East New York to City Line. In addition, the KCERy later acquired access to the tracks of the Brooklyn Bridge railroad to bring its trains to the Park Row terminal in New York City (Manhattan) opposite the New York City Hall.

Service on the Brighton Beach Line

In 1896, the KCERy built a short elevated line from Franklin Avenue and Fulton Street to connect to the tracks of the Brooklyn & Brighton Beach RR south of Atlantic Avenue, permitting KCERy elevated trains access to the communities of Crown Heights, Flatbush, Midwood, Homecrest, Sheepshead Bay and Coney Island at Brighton Beach.

References

  1. "Trains to Run". Brooklyn Daily Eagle. Brooklyn, NY. April 21, 1888. p. 6.
  2. "Clipping from The Brooklyn Daily Eagle on Newspapers.com". Brooklyn Public Library. April 24, 1888. p. 6.
  3. "Heavy Travel". Brooklyn Daily Eagle. Brooklyn, NY. April 24, 1888. p. 6.
  4. "New Route to Coney Island". Brooklyn Daily Eagle. Brooklyn, NY. August 14, 1896. p. 12.
  5. "First Trains to Brighton". Brooklyn Daily Eagle. Brooklyn, NY. August 14, 1896. p. 7.

Sources

New York City Subway lines
A
Division
IRT
Manhattan/Queens
Bronx
Brooklyn
Bridges and tunnels
Former
B
Division
BMT
Manhattan/Queens
Eastern division
Southern division
Bridges and tunnels
Former
IND
Manhattan/Bronx
Brooklyn/Queens
Bridges and tunnels
Former
BMT/IND
Interdivision
connections
Purpose-built
Yards
Other
Note that this is a list of New York City Subway lines, which are the physical infrastructure over which services operate.
Lines with colors next to them are trunk lines; trunk lines determine the color of New York City Subway service bullets, except for shuttles, which are dark gray.
New York City Subway
Current
services
  • "1" train
  • "2" train
  • "3" train
  • "4" train
  • "5" train
  • "6" train
  • "7" train
  • "A" train
  • "B" train
  • "C" train
  • "D" train
  • "E" train
  • "F" train
  • "G" train
  • "J" train
  • "L" train
  • "M" train
  • "N" train
  • "Q" train
  • "R" train
  • "W" train
  • "Z" train
shuttle train Shuttles
42nd Street
Franklin Avenue
Rockaway Park
Planned
"T" train
Defunct
services
1985–present
  • "9" train
  • "H" train
  • "K" train
  • "V" train
  • JFK Express
Pre-1985
Shuttles
Bowling Green
Broadway/63rd Street
Culver
Grand Street
Nassau Street
Polo Grounds
Sixth Avenue/63rd Street
BMT numbers
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
Brooklyn Loops
East New York Loop
Unused labelsUnused New York City Subway service labels
Stations (List)
By borough
The Bronx
Brooklyn
Manhattan
Queens
By type
Closed
Terminals
Transfer
Accessible
Divisions
Other lists
History
Early history
Expansions
Notable crashes
Strikes
Service
disruptions
Other major
incidents
Infrastructure
Arts and
culture
Miscellaneous
Other rapid
transit in NYC
Historical
Companies and predecessors of the Brooklyn–Manhattan Transit Corporation
Elevated railroads
and subways


Streetcars and
cable cars
Buses
Streetcar lists
Other
Carhouses
Financing, advertising,
real estate, etc.
Categories: